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Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) Review

A simple and effective budget laptop

3.5
Good

The Bottom Line

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) undercuts the competition with decent performance in its base configuration. It’s basic as bricks, though, and the higher-end configuration just isn't as competitive.

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Pros

  • Smooth everyday operation
  • Extensive battery life
  • Current Wi-Fi connectivity
  • Competitive starting price

Cons

  • Limited performance headroom
  • Dated, somewhat flimsy design
  • Lackluster display
  • Top configuration is outclassed

Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) Specs

Laptop Class Budget
Processor AMD Ryzen 3 7320U
Processor Speed 2.4 GHz
RAM (as Tested) 8 GB
Boot Drive Type SSD
Boot Drive Capacity (as Tested) 128 GB
Screen Size 15.6 inches
Native Display Resolution 1920 by 1080
Touch Screen
Panel Technology IPS
Variable Refresh Support None
Screen Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Graphics Processor AMD Radeon Graphics
Wireless Networking 802.11ax, Bluetooth 5.2
Dimensions (HWD) 0.75 by 14.3 by 9.4 inches
Weight 3.77 lbs
Operating System Windows 11 Home
Tested Battery Life (Hours:Minutes) 16:46

best of the year logo Acer’s Aspire 3 (A315-24P; $399) laptop has plodded along almost unchanged over several generations of hardware, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. It’s an effective, simple budget laptop that comes at a low starting price. At this budget level, the priority is simply getting a machine that works. The Acer Aspire 3 checks that box, even if it doesn’t have a lot of wiggle room: More-capable laptops come in just above it in price, like the Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i and Dell Inspiron 15 (3525), which are intermittently on sale for $500.


Limited Options, Limited Fuss

Small internal hardware updates have been sliding into the otherwise consistent exterior of the Aspire 3 line for years. Carrying that torch, the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) has a bit of aluminum on the display lid and keyboard deck, though I can’t say it feels much better than plastic, lending little rigidity to the display. Plus, with the plastic bottom, the whole system is a little more bendable than you’d expect a laptop to be. The hinge is a bit sticky, so even though the lid can be opened with one hand, the base of the laptop will start to lift up as the display opens up, making it a two-hand job in the end.

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The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

Fortunately, once the laptop is opened up, it has slightly better physical utility. It sits firmly on four rubber feet that prevent it from sliding around. And, since it’s so firmly planted, the display avoids any noticeable wobbling.

The keyboard on the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

The keyboard is best described as fine, with keys that feel almost convex and have an uneven travel if pressed on the corners. This makes centering my fingers on the keys and keeping them there while typing is fairly difficult. Acer clusters the arrow keys tightly, making for tiny up and down keys—something of a laptop-making sin.

Acer also includes a not-quite-full number pad. It’s got the numbers all in order, but it doesn’t have the right column with a large + and Enter key. Instead it squeezes + and - above the numbers and crams Enter down in the bottom with 0 and the decimal key. In fairness, it’s better to have a so-so number pad than no number pad at all. Not all 15-inch laptops include them. The keyboard lacks backlighting, though, which is a worse offense. 

The top cover of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

Since Acer is effectively reusing the same black and silver design, it’s little surprise that the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) looks rather dated. A blocky design comes alongside thick display bezels that fall well behind the trend toward narrower and narrower bezels, even in some budget products. The result is a laptop that’s a little larger than need be.

For instance, the recent Dell Inspiron 15 (3525) fits the same 15.6-inch, 16:9 screen into a laptop measuring 0.83 by 14.1 by 9.3 inches, but the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) measures 0.75 by 14.3 by 9.4 inches. Even if it’s not packed to the gills with hardware, the size lends to weight, which sees this modest laptop weigh 3.77 pounds. That’s not exactly heavy, but feels more dense than it ought to for a laptop that lacks any components that could be described as “beefy.”

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

With an unchanging design, it’s under-the-hood changes that make the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) something new each year. This model comes in two configurations. As tested at a value of $399 (though seen on sale for as low as $379), the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) includes an AMD Ryzen 3 7320U processor (CPU), which has four cores and eight threads, 8GB of LPDDR5 memory (RAM), and 128GB of solid-state storage (SSD). Acer sells an upgraded configuration with a higher-clocked Ryzen 5 7520U CPU and double the storage for $499. In either case, it’s worth pointing out that, though the processor would appear to be part of the Ryzen 7000 Series, it is in fact built on Zen 2 architecture—not the refined Zen 3 architecture found in desktop Ryzen 7000 processors. Both Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) models come running Windows 11 Home.

Despite having a low-power CPU, the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) has a several-inch-wide exhaust vent above the keyboard for active cooling. I’d be careful about spilling drinks or dropping crumbs around this laptop, as the vertical exposure of the vent makes it extra easy to drop things in.

The left side ports of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

The CPU and RAM aren’t the only internal upgrades, though. The system includes a Wi-Fi 6 card with 2x2 Mi-Mo for steady internet connectivity. It also has an HDMI 2.1 port for 4K output. Acer backs up those connections with two USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports and a USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port that also supports charging. You'll also find a headphone jack and lock slot on the right side of the laptop. No dice on a media card reader, though.

The right side ports of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

The webcam is just 720p, but you shouldn't expect much more for the price. Images look rather soft, but the sensor does a fair job brightening up the picture in an otherwise dim room.

Despite the large surface area of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P), its speakers are on the underside and port out of the front edge. This will see them obstructed when you use the laptop on your lap—an ironic outcome.

The bottom of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
(Credit: Kyle Cobian)

What It Feels Like to Use the Acer Aspire 3

You'll likely find nothing remarkable about the design of the human interface on this machine. The touchpad is decently large, but not among the smoothest I’ve used. It also takes a strong press to get it to click down. The short travel of the keys on the keyboard and the poppy membranes make for fast typing, but the convex design is an issue for accuracy.

I was able to reach 102 words per minute typing in Monkeytype, but my accuracy was just 93%. Every time my fingers tapped on the corner of a key instead of the center, I hesitated a little waiting to make sure the key pressed down, and that it was, in fact, the key I intended to hit. This is less of an issue with contoured keycaps that make centering easier. That keyboard confidence goes down dramatically in the dark, as, again, key backlighting is AWOL.

The number pad may serve for data entry but generally isn’t up to snuff. Since it doesn’t have the standard arithmetic inputs around the numbers, it simply will not do for math work. That also will make it more tedious to input formulas while working in spreadsheets. 

Acer's display is just serviceable. The contrast and 1080p resolution are enough for everything to appear clearly. But the 16:9 aspect ratio is better suited to an entertainment device than a work machine, and this laptop falls solidly into the latter camp. It comes up short on brightness and color volume, which means it’s hardly a delight to watch content on. Fortunately, Acer includes an anti-glare finish that makes it easy to see clearly even in brighter settings.

Given that the machine is already starting on a weak foot for entertainment with its display, it’s not too much of a disappointment that the speakers are also insubstantial. They struggle to produce much volume, and they’re lacking in bass. These speakers get the job done in a quiet space at arm’s length, but they won’t do in larger spaces with ambient noise or at a distance.

I’d almost give Acer credit for not loading the machine up with too much bloatware, but it starts off with such a paltry amount of storage that any extraneous software feels like too much. A number of Acer services, Dropbox, OneNote, WhatsApp, TikTok, Instagram, Mahjong, and Solitaire all come pre-loaded, as do some shortcut weblinks to Amazon services, Booking.com, and the Forge of Empires game. With only a few small applications installed and no extra files added to the computer, the 128GB drive had only a little more than 70GB of available storage space. 


Testing the Acer Aspire 3: What Simple Hardware Can Do

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) model I tested ducks below much of the fiercer competition with its low price. Few models with comparable hardware are coming in below $400. However, the field for $500 laptops, where the higher-spec Aspire 3 configuration sits, is ripe with meaner machines that will give it no quarter. 

I’ve compared the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) with a number of low-price laptops to provide some perspective on how its performance stacks up. The Dell Inspiron 15 3525 is a budget model that’s built to serve a similar role, though as tested was configured with a Ryzen 5 5625U processor, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage. Meanwhile, a suite of Lenovo laptops round out the rest of the competition with the Lenovo IdeaPad Windows Duet 5i, the Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15IAU7, and the Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i all running a range of 12th Gen Intel Core U-series CPUs.

Unfortunately, because of the particularly low price of the Aspire 3 model tested, most competition either lacked comparable performance for the same price or produced similar performance for a higher price. That’s to the Acer's advantage, but only if the tested configuration is actually available at its $399 price. That's hardly a certainty, as this laptop is unreasonably difficult to find for sale online, with Acer simply redirecting shoppers to Amazon third-party listings. The $499 model is for sale directly from Acer, making it easier to find, but the price makes it harder to recommend, particularly when laptops like the 2022 Asus Zenbook 14 OLED have been on sale for that same price from Best Buy from time to time throughout the last year.

Productivity Tests

To assess each laptop’s potential in real-world productivity, we run UL's PCMark 10 to simulate office and content-creation workflows and benchmark overall performance for office-centric tasks such as word processing, spreadsheeting, web browsing, and videoconferencing. We also run PCMark 10's Full System Drive test to measure the load time and throughput of a laptop's storage.

An additional set of benchmarks focus on the CPU, running all available cores and threads, to rate a PC's suitability for processor-intensive workloads. Maxon's Cinebench R23 uses that company's Cinema 4D engine to render a complex scene, while Geekbench 5.4 Pro from Primate Labs simulates popular apps ranging from PDF rendering and speech recognition to machine learning. Finally, we use the open-source video transcoder HandBrake 1.4 to convert a 12-minute video clip from 4K to 1080p resolution (lower times are better).

We round out this productivity testing with PugetBench for Photoshop by Puget Systems, which uses the Creative Cloud version 22 of Adobe's seminal image editor to rate a PC's performance for content creation and multimedia applications. It's an automated extension that executes a variety of general and GPU-accelerated Photoshop tasks ranging from opening, rotating, resizing, and saving an image to applying masks, gradient fills, and filters.

At PCMag, a score above 4,000 in PCMark 10’s productivity benchmark is considered a positive sign of everyday utility. So the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)’s score of 4,282 is a feather in its cap considering its low price. However, it’s the lowest score next to the other four laptops in this comparison. It’s likely that the higher-end configuration of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) might make up some of that ground with its higher clock speeds, but it would be trading its price advantage.

Unfortunately, because of the small memory capacity of the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P), PCMark’s storage test could not run. Asus uses a modest PCIe SSD that has sequential read and write speeds slightly in excess of 1,500MB/s as measured in CrystalDiskMark. A quality PCIe 3.0 SSD could readily see speeds twice as fast though, and the PCIe 4.0 SSDs coming with many newer machines are capable of speeds four times as fast.

Though the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) manages to beat the Lenovo IdeaPad Windows Duet 5i in the HandBrake encoding test, it lags behind in the rest of the productivity tests. Its CPU's multi-core performance simply can’t keep up with the Intel Core i5-1235U or Ryzen 5 5625U (which is built on the same architecture). It comes close, but still falls short of the Intel Core i3-1215U as well. Crucially, the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) was also the only laptop here to fail the PugetBench test. This was again due to a lack of memory.

Graphics Tests

In order to determine the graphical capabilities of each machine, we test Windows PCs' graphics processors (GPUs) with a pair of DirectX 12 gaming simulations using UL's 3DMark Night Raid (low intensity) and Time Spy (high intensity) tests.

We further test the systems with the cross-platform GPU benchmark GFXBench 5, which stresses both low-level routines like texturing and high-level, game-like image rendering. The 1440p Aztec Ruins and 1080p Car Chase tests, rendered offscreen to accommodate different display resolutions, exercise graphics and compute shaders using the OpenGL programming interface and hardware tessellation respectively. The more frames per second (fps), the better.

All of these systems are running on some version of integrated graphics. It suffices to say that means none of them is terribly powerful for visual workloads. The Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i stands out for its Intel Iris Xe Graphics, which also benefits from more memory in the system, but even it wasn’t an across-the-board winner because it crashed during one of the GFXBench tests. The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) largely trailed the pack, often considerably, though it did outpace the Dell Inspiron 15 3525 in GFXBench and beat the Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15IAU7 by a hair in 3DMark’s Night Raid test.

For some perspective, a system running even a lower-end discrete GPU, like the GTX 1650 Ti or RTX 3050, would trounce all of these systems in graphics performance.

Battery and Display Tests

To measure battery life and see how it stacks up among competing laptops, we do a battery rundown test playing a locally stored 720p video file (the open-source Blender movie Tears of Steel) with the laptop’s display brightness set to 50% and audio volume at 100%. We make sure the battery is fully charged before the test, with Wi-Fi and any keyboard backlighting (not a factor here!) turned off. 

We also assess key aspects of the display using a Datacolor SpyderX Elite monitor calibration sensor and its Windows software to measure a laptop screen's color saturation—what percentage of the sRGB, Adobe RGB, and DCI-P3 color gamuts or palettes the display can show—and its 50% and 100% brightness in nits (candelas per square meter).

These low-cost, productivity laptops all tend to have one thing in common: truly utilitarian displays. Sharpness and clarity may be decent, but they aren’t prioritizing visual splendor. Only one has a display worth attention, and that’s the Lenovo IdeaPad Windows Duet 5i, which is also not a work machine but rather an entertainment-ready tablet that can convert into a laptop with an attached keyboard accessory. Its display produces far more color and a higher peak brightness—both will make media more visually attractive. 

Meanwhile, the rest of the pack fails to cover even just 70% of the sRGB color space, so none of them should serve for even design work because of their limited color palette. Of the pack, the Acer Aspire 3’s display is also the dimmest, topping out at 244.5 nits. The Dell Inspiron 15 3525 isn’t much brighter, but the two other Lenovo laptops' panels are closer to a respectable 400 nits. 

Where the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) shines is in its battery life. The struggle to keep up in performance all amounts to this: low-power operation. It ran a marathon around the other machines, and it did so respectably. With a runtime of 16 hours and 46 minutes in our test, it outstripped the rest of the pack by several hours and beat the Lenovo IdeaPad Windows Duet 5i by almost double. Better still, the test runs each machine at 50% brightness, but one machine’s 50% isn’t the same as another's. With the Aspire 3 running at 50% brightness, it produced 119.1 nits. The Dell Inspiron 15 3525 was close at 106.3 nits, but its battery didn’t even break 10 hours. Meanwhile, the three Lenovo machines all had considerably lower brightness measurements at 50%, with the Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15IAU7 and Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i failing to top even 50 nits. Even then, they only barely topped 10 hours and lag several hours behind the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) in battery life. 

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) simply proves a capable machine for lengthy sessions away from power outlets—just don't come to it for media tasks for multiple reasons.


Verdict: A Basic Laptop That's a Touch Too Simple for 2023

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) is nothing special. It’s a lower-power machine that can get simple work done and not much else. I wouldn’t recommend it for entertainment or anything beyond basic web browsing and light, office tasks. But it handles those latter tasks with surprisingly little difficulty, and it runs for ages on its battery, thanks to its low-power processor. If you can get it for $379, it’s a decent value. However, when you're already spending $400, it makes sense to jump up to $500 by either saving or financing. While the $499 model is more readily available, and though it might be more powerful, it doesn't compare with what's offered by recommended competitors in the budget space, like the Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15 (2022) or the Lenovo IdeaPad Windows Duet 5i.

Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P)
3.5
Pros
  • Smooth everyday operation
  • Extensive battery life
  • Current Wi-Fi connectivity
  • Competitive starting price
View More
Cons
  • Limited performance headroom
  • Dated, somewhat flimsy design
  • Lackluster display
  • Top configuration is outclassed
View More
The Bottom Line

The Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P) undercuts the competition with decent performance in its base configuration. It’s basic as bricks, though, and the higher-end configuration just isn't as competitive.

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About Mark Knapp

Contributing Writer

Mark Knapp has covered tech for most of the past decade, keeping readers up to speed on the latest developments and going hands-on with everything from phones and computers to e-bikes and drones to separate the marketing from the reality. Catch him on Twitter at @Techn0Mark or on PCMag, IGN, TechRadar, T3, Business Insider, and Reviewed.

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